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Ever since its founding in 1948, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea has maintained an aggressive and bellicose international security posture. Today, fully two decades after the end of the Cold War, North Korea's external defense and security policies look arguably more extreme and anomalous than ever.
Chinese strategists are thinking how to win a nuclear war. What is the U.S. doing?
The reception in Moscow to U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul during his first few months on the job has been unusual, if not downright hostile, a lot more Cold War than Russian Reset.
Liberals often speak in seemingly harmless cliches that they hope will penetrate our mental defenses. Here are some of the most egregious examples.
What were the original hopes and expectations of Russia’s 1991 revolution? A group of leading experts will discuss these and other questions in the context of Russia’s domestic politics, economic policies, role in the global economy and, above all, its relations with the United States.
There is a certain irony, as well as much truth, in Defense Secretary Leon Panetta's drumbeat of warnings about the consequences of further cuts to U.S. military budgets of the sort threatened under the current deficit reduction law.
The author offers a tightly observed chronicle of America's relationship with the world since the end of the Cold War.
Online registration for this event is closed. Walk-in registrations will be accepted.
Timothy Naftali of Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, and author of George H.W. Bush and Khrushchev's Cold War will deliver the January Bradley Lecture.
Americans have a hard time being realists. George Herbert Walker Bush was no...






